GLORY BE TO THE TRINITY
SERMON PREACHED BY FR. TONY NOBLE ON SUNDAY JUNE 7th 2009
"Glory be to
the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost: as it was in the beginning,
is now and ever shall be, world without end.
Amen ".
The Gloria Patri is sung or said at the end of
the psalms at Morning and Evening Prayer.
It is always included in the divine office whenever psalms are said. However
it is not added to the psalm at Mass - because when we hear the readings at the
Mass Sunday by Sunday, the psalm is meant to be in the context of Scripture
readings, and follows the Old Testament reading.
Today is an exception. "Glory be to the Father…"
is added to the psalm because it is Trinity Sunday!! It actually proclaims what Trinity Sunday is
about…..it is about praising the Holy Trinity.
Most people think it's about trying to explain the Trinity. Every
preacher tries to wrestle with this every year.
The first thing we need to realise is that any
understanding of the Trinity involves the fact that we ultimately worship the
holy and undivided Trinity. Trinity
Sunday is not really proclaiming a
doctrine, but proclaiming that we worship God revealed as Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. And that is why the Athanasian Creed - the
great Creed that expounds the doctrine of the Trinity - has a statement about
the Trinity in these words: "And the Catholic Faith is this: that we
worship one God in Trinity, and Trinity in Unity". That is the essence
of the "Glory be…." - it is about worshipping the Holy Trinity.
Many people get confused and think that second part of
the "Gloria Patri" is stating that the world will never end. Indeed, "As
it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without end"
seems to say that the world will never end.
This is a misunderstanding. What we are actually saying
is this: Glory be to the Holy Trinity, Father…and as it was in the
beginning, such glory shall continue for as long as the world never ends. It's about praising God the Trinity forever
- as long as there is a creation to praise the Trinity. This is taken up by
Psalm 93 when it refers to God as existing from everlasting.
But what has the encounter between Jesus and
Nicodemus in John 3:1-16 got to do with the doctrine of the Trinity? It
doesn’t seem to be a doctrinal encounter or Jesus teaching about the Trinity.
Looking at the gospel, however, not only reveals the
Trinity, but also how the Trinity relates to us personally.
It begins allegorically with a question that many
people ask: Why do you have to believe such a complicated doctrine - can't
you just be a good person to be a Christian?"
Nicodemus comes to Jesus secretly. At first he
flatters him - or is it a back-handed compliment? "Rabbi, we know that you are a
teacher come from God; for no one can do these signs that you do, unless God is
with him". Is he suggesting that
Jesus isn't a teacher - perhaps just a worker of signs. After all Nicodemus was
a Pharisee - he knew all the teachings about God from the Scriptures and from
his own tradition in the Jewish faith.
It was the signs that Jesus did that attracted
Nicodemus to him. It wasn't what Jesus had been teaching - Nicodemus probably
thought he knew better. However, he does admit that the signs indicate there is
something of God here in Jesus.
That is surely the problem for many people in our
society. They see signs of Christianity - welfare, justice, good works,
healing, people full of joy and peace, and often able to cope with problems
better than other people. But they
don't want to commit to the Church that these Christians belong to. They don't
want to believe in what Jesus taught. This is what Nicodemus is represents.
So to the answer that Jesus gives to Nicodemus immediately:
"Unless one is born anew". Not just a new vision, not just a
new way of doing things, not just change for the sake of change - but a new
birth. It's far more extravagant than just changing the way we think.
Then comes the teaching: "Unless one is born
of water and the spirit".
Now Jesus introduces the Holy Spirit. In so doing
Jesus is actually introducing the Holy Trinity. Nicodemus has already referred
to God the Father, and is coming to terms with who Jesus is…..now Jesus brings
in the Holy Spirit. We are indeed in the
territory of the doctrine of the Trinity.
Signs are not enough, Jesus says to Nicodemus - you
have to believe. And you have to believe that there is a third person of the
Trinity who can accomplish this new birth.
Nicodemus was familiar with John's baptism of water -
a baptism of repentance in the River Jordan. But John Baptist himself said that
someone would come after him and baptise with the Holy Spirit. And that is
exactly what Jesus is offering to Nicodemus.
You will remember on another occasion that Jesus said
John was great - but that even the least in the Kingdom of Heaven was greater
than John. For to enter that kingdom
required more than John's baptism. It required a baptism in the name of the
Trinity.
Jesus' last command to the apostles was to: "Go,
teach all nations, and baptise them in the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Spirit". That is what they did, and that is why we are
here today.
But they could not have done that unless they
understood the Trinity and believed in it. From the beginning, to be a
Christian was not only to follow Jesus, but was to be baptised in the Trinity,
and to understand that it was a truth from God, a teaching of Jesus.
Having got to this point, we now have Jesus’ affirming
the doctrine of the Trinity. Nicodemus says: "How can this be, how can I
be reborn?" Jesus replies that he
speaks of heavenly things, of heavenly truth - because he is from heaven. "He
who descended from heaven, the Son of Man".
Jesus is claiming that he is equal to the God whom
Nicodemus believes in and worships - that he is in fact the second person of
the Trinity. Jesus is more than a
teacher. He is the divine Son who existed in heaven before he was born. "The
Son of Man who came from heaven".
Equal to the Father, but obviously different.
In Jesus we see the very life of heaven, the very
life of God, revealed to us in human form. Revealed to us in a way that not
only can we understand, but can have a personal relationship with.
But he says more. It is not enough that the Son of
Man should come down from heaven - he must also be lifted up. What wonderful
phraseology we have here. Now Jesus is indicating
his mission as Son of God - to die on the Cross so that the world may live.
Finally Jesus refers to the Father in his great
statement: "God so loved the world that he gave his only Son". The Father gives us his Son, the Son gives
us the Holy Spirit. Three persons equal
but different, united in the Holy Trinity.
God gives, whether Father, Son, or Holy Spirit. And
nothing is beyond his love. It extends from Nicodemus to the whole world in the
life-giving death of the Son.
So the message today is that the Trinity is not
complicated - it is a union of love, like any union that you or I have of love.
The Doctrine of the Trinity marks out the Christian
religion as both different and apart from all others. One God - yet revealed in three
persons. Christianity is not another
religion of prayer and good works; it is not another religion of individual
salvation; nor is it the path for an individual to attain ultimate bliss.
Christianity is a
religion that redeems the world - and it is focused on a community of love, which
we call the Holy and Blessed Trinity.
The Doctrine of the
Trinity which we celebrate and worship today is the highest truth from God -
and ultimately it focuses on worship.
"Glory be to
the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit: as it was in the beginning,
is now and ever shall be, world without end.
Amen ".